Cardinal, Silver, Bronze

42 cur­rent or for­mer Car­di­nals are com­pet­ing in this year’s Olympics.

True sto­ry: last night Andrew was over at our house and men­tioned that one of his advisees (Dana Kirk) is com­pet­ing in the 200m wom­en’s but­ter­fly tomor­row. “I tell her what class­es to take.”

That’s kind of wild.

It reminds me of one of my all-time favorite Stan­ford sto­ries.

Some ath­letes are in a study group dis­cussing their plans over break. One says he’s head­ing to Can­cun. Anoth­er men­tions that he’s going hik­ing in the moun­tains. The last guy says he’s going to the Mas­ters.

One of the oth­er atheletes knows how hard it is to get tick­ets, so he asks, “Man, how did you score tick­ets to the Mas­ters? That’s hard to do.”

The last guy: “Dude, I’m play­ing.”

“Oh. I knew you were good, Tiger. I did­n’t know you were that good.”

note: that’s a true sto­ry, but I can’t find the exact ref­er­ence and so I made up some details.

Stone Jars to Beer Kegs Convertor

I was reflect­ing on the sto­ry of Jesus turn­ing water into wine and began to think about the amount of wine involved. I was try­ing to fig­ure out how to describe it to col­lege stu­dents in a way they could visu­al­ize eas­i­ly.

So what rep­re­sents lots of alco­hol to a stu­dent?

All in unison–“a keg!”

So what is the equiv­a­lent num­ber of kegs to the six stone jars Christ trans­formed (or as a tongue-twister, how many kegs could Christ con­vert)?

A sim­ple inter­net search helped me dis­cov­er that Jesus cre­at­ed about 10 kegs of alco­hol.

Just in case you ever need to know that.

Best quote about the sto­ry:

Nympha pudi­ca Deum vid­it, et erubuitRichard Crashaw
The mod­est water, see­ing its God, blushed.

Best joke I know about turn­ing water into wine:

Did you hear about the Bap­tist dea­con who was dri­ving along when he was stopped by the local police. See­ing an emp­ty bot­tle on the floor, the offi­cer said, “Sir, have you been drink­ing?”

“No offi­cer, just water,” replied the smil­ing dea­con.

“Then why do I smell alco­hol on your breath?” asked the police­man.

“Praise the Lord!” shout­ed the dea­con. “He’s done it again!”

New photos of Dana

This week Dana has start­ed eat­ing rice cere­al. Check out her pho­to album to see her enjoy­ing her first meal.

Stanford Flickr

Check out this amaz­ing new ser­vice from Flickr–it groups pic­tures by key­word and pro­vides an RSS feed for you to keep up to date. Check the Stan­ford pho­tos (there’s also a XA tag, but it does­n’t have much).

Youth and Technology

I just read a web page that rang true with my expe­ri­ence: it’s Cam­pus Cru­sade’s Youth and Tech­nol­o­gy Forum.

If you work with col­le­gians (or youth), give it a read. Hat tip: Andrew.

Nate Flake

One of our alum­ni (Netha­neel Flake) post­ed this to a group dis­cus­sion list and I thought some of you might find it inter­est­ing. To give you con­text, Nate was a lin­guis­tics major who set off for the Ori­ent upon grad­u­at­ing. He had no def­i­nite plans except to prac­tice his lan­guage skills.

For those of you who know me and might be won­der­ing, I’d just like to let you all know what I’ve been up to in the last month.

So, it turns out that after spend­ing a week in Chi­na (Xia­men) mak­ing friends and find­ing a uni­ver­si­ty to spend a semes­ter, I had to return to my Aun­t’s house in Hong Kong to apply for a Chi­nese stu­dent visa. But, while in Hong Kong, I found out my class­mate from my YWAM dis­ci­ple­ship train­ing school in France was in Tai­wan with his Los Ange­les church. They were in des­per­ate need of a trans­la­tor and helper in their sum­mer Eng­lish camp, and I was in des­per­ate need of a place to spend a month, so I came on down. I’ve had such a great expe­ri­ence among these Tai­wanese Chris­tians that I have decid­ed to study here instead of China…also, I need make a bit of dough on the side to pay my bills, and frankly, teach­ing Eng­lish in Chi­na is like work­ing for peanuts.

I feel a lot more at home here at this church than I do at Stan­ford. Peo­ple seem much more coop­er­a­tive than com­pet­i­tive, and work­ing with the kids here has been much more reward­ing than Bayshore (that may be because while at Bayshore I learned a few things about deal­ing with kids from the first day you meet them). I’m real­ly hop­ing I can find ways to have an impact on the kids here of all ages, both in Eng­lish class­es and hope­ful­ly also on pub­lic bas­ket­ball courts. We’ll see what actu­al­ly hap­pens.

I’m very very aware of God’s work in my life right now. All I was hop­ing for dur­ing this six month win­dow was a few friends and if pos­si­ble, con­tact with a church. Now I find myself com­plete­ly immersed in both. Being sur­round­ed by pure-heart­ed Chris­tians with healthy life goals (as opposed to the self-con­cern­ing over­achiev­ing one I’ve devel­oped over the years) has already begun to have its effect on me. I’m excit­ed to know that I will be spend­ing the next 6 months liv­ing in a room at the church/pastor’s house and earn­ing mon­ey by tutor­ing most­ly young adults that I already know and like.

All I have to do is get all the visa paper­work for the uni­ver­si­ty fin­ished by tues­day, fly to Hong Kong, get the new visa, hang out with my friends in Xia­men and then come back here in ear­ly sep­tem­ber (if I come back ear­li­er, my visa will expire before the six months is up).

So, when you think of me, pray that with such a com­pli­cat­ed plan every­thing will fall into place. My biggest fear/lack of faith–going broke–appears to be tak­en care of. Instead of hav­ing to beg peo­ple to help me find a job or let me be their tutor, every­one has come to me and asked. A cou­ple high school stu­dents gath­ered enough of their friends togeth­er and orga­nized their sched­ules so that I can reach my min­i­mum mon­e­tary require­ments teach­ing one Eng­lish class, twice a week.

Well, that’s it. I just want­ed to stay in touch. Write me back when you get a chance, but if you don’t I under­stand. We’re all too busy for our own good, aren’t we?

Your Broth­er in Christ,

–Nate

Get­ting this email was cool for two rea­sons.

1) It was good to hear from Nate.

2) It remind­ed me of our vision all over again. When we touch the cam­pus, we touch the world.

Happy Birthday, Paula!

Paula Kay Davis (nee Bor­de­lon), was born 30 years ago today.

Woohoo! 🙂

Dana’s four month check up

Dana had her four month check up this past Mon­day. The doc­tor says that she is a per­fect­ly healthy girl. Dana is in the 50th per­cential for her weight and length, she weighed in at 13 pounds 8 ounces and is 24 inch­es long. To see pic­tures of Dana vis­it her web album.

Comment Moderation Tweaked

I used to hold all com­ments for mod­er­a­tion, but that was annoy­ing. I’ve start­ed using a WP plu­g­in that strikes a bal­ance between ease of com­ment­ing and spam pre­ven­tion.

So if you want to make a com­ment, go right ahead!

Please let me know if there are any prob­lems.